#PeoplesHistory | 🇮🇷 On this day in 1953, the CIA’s first successful coup overthrew Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh and his democratically elected government. British intelligence backed their US counterparts in this illegal act.
Mossadegh was an icon of Iran’s secular democracy and resistance to foreign colonial powers. He became Prime Minister in 1951. He nationalized Iranian oil and instituted radical measures such as social security, land reform, and wealth redistribution.
The nationalization of oil, which took it out of British hands, was celebrated by the Iranian people. But the colonial and imperialist powers were not happy.
Britain responded by imposing economic sanctions and organizing a boycott of Iranian oil. If that sounds familiar, it’s because the same steps are used against countries like Venezuela - and Iran - today.
These measures intensified the economic crisis and scarcity while the CIA propaganda machine ran campaigns to portray him as a “dictator.”
As domestic tensions increased and undercut Mossadegh’s popularity, he was forced to resign on August 19, 1953, imprisoned for three years, and then placed under house arrest until his death in 1967.
A US-backed general formed a government that worked closely with the US to strengthen the Shah’s monarchical rule in the country until the Iranian Revolution ended it all in 1979.
Almost 60 years later, declassified CIA documents admitted its role in the coup, stating that it “was carried out under CIA direction as an act of US foreign policy, conceived and approved at the highest levels of government.”
The CIA and British intelligence plot against Mossadegh, known as Operation Ajax, is a model that to this day continues to be used against countries that stand up to imperialism.
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🇨🇺 Two years ago on July 11, 2021, Cuba experienced one of the most serious and coordinated destabilization campaigns against it in recent history.
Read more 🧵
Right-wing groups supported by US politicians, think tanks, & armed with an international social media strategy, attempted to exploit the discontent created by the tightening of the blockade to push for the overthrow of the Cuban revolutionary government.
🇨🇺 In response, the people of Cuba took to the streets to defend the revolution, while Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel himself went directly to the communities that had participated in the protests to listen to their grievances. peoplesdispatch.org/2021/07/12/cub…
#PeoplesHistory | As Pride month comes to a close, this is your reminder that Stonewall was a working-class riot against all forms of oppression.
Today, we remember the members of the LGBTQ+ community who fought against police repression in the 6-day #StonewallRebellion, which began in the early hours of this day in 1969.
At the time, the New York police had a policy of closing gay bars and on June 28, 1969 it raided the Stonewall Inn which was considered a "refuge" for mainly working-class and poor members of the LGBTQ+ community.
#PeoplesHistory | Today, we remember when the heroic Cuban people defeated US imperialism.
On this day in 1961, about 1500 far-right Cuban exiles trained, financed, and supported by the CIA tried to invade Cuba, landing in Playa Girón, to “recover” Cuba for the US imperialist benefit. They also planned to kill Fidel Castro and destroy the popular Cuban Revolution.
The Cuban Revolutionary Army, directly led from the front lines by Fidel Castro, repelled the attack in less than three days.
🇸🇩 As many as 60 people have been killed since fighting broke out between the Sudanese Army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
Understand what is happening from a left perspective. [1/11]
Since the fighting started, the two forces have released differing accounts of “who fired the first shot”.
The RSF claims that the Army carried out a series of surprise attacks against their troops and bases in locations across the country. [2/11]
The Army maintains that fighting began after the RSF allegedly took control of the Presidential Palace, the seat of the junta’s chairman and army chief, General Abdel Fattah al Burhan. [3/11]
10,000 members of people’s movements from across Brazil also travelled to the capital to participate in the Popular Movements’ Camp to celebrate and reaffirm the need to struggle for pro-people policies.
#PeoplesHistory | August 15 marked one year since the Taliban took control over #Afghanistan, marking the end of the military occupation and war led by the #US and its #NATO allies.
Let’s look at the legacy of two decades of US-NATO imperialism and the punitive measures taken against the Taliban govt.